Saturday, August 06, 2005

Forget Not, Hiroshima!

Today, August the 6th marks the 60th anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing. On this date, year 1945 was when the US aircraft “Enola Gay” dropped the first weapon of mass destruction ever used in war on Hiroshima, Japan. The devastation levelled an entire city to the ground and killed 150,000 people within seconds.

In 1991, I had the chance to visit the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. Having been there personally at ground zero, seeing war pictures, murals, video footages and even talking to some survivors first hand made me feel the immensity of the destruction. Man’s inhumanity to man! Still fresh in my mind was the story narrated to us by one survivor of how some of the victims fleeing away from the inferno tried to jump into the Hiroshima River thinking they’ll find relief in it. But relief there was not, only gruesome death. For the water was boiling hot!

Years after the war, thousands more of the city’s surviving inhabitants eventually died of diseases directly attributable to radiation exposure. Perhaps none more poignant as the story of Sadako Sasaki, a 12 year old girl who for 10 years after the bombing suffered leukemia. While in the hospital Sadako started making origami paper cranes believing in an age-old Japanese belief that one’s wish will be granted after making one thousand paper cranes. She tried and tried, never losing hope, until she became very weak and eventually succumbed to the disease. She managed to only make 600 or so cranes before she died. After she died, Sadako’s classmates decided to build a monument for her of a beautiful girl holding a crane over her head. Inscribed at the bottom of the statue: "This is our cry, This is our prayer, Peace in the world". Today, children all around the world create paper cranes as a symbol of peace.

An epitaph at Hiroshima’s Peace Park reads, “Let All the Souls Here Rest in Peace, For We Shall Not Repeat the Evil.” It is my hope that the nightmare of Hiroshima never to happen again. And so with reflection and prayer, I bid you all, forget not, Hiroshima!

Tama ka KaU, we should not forget such an inhuman act. Nothing can justify this deed. Sana the leaders of the world will find guidance sa sinabi ni pareng John... "Unconditional war can no longer lead to unconditional victory. It can no longer serve to settle disputes. It can no longer be of concern to great powers alone. For a nuclear disaster, spread by winds and waters and fear, could well engulf the great and the small, the rich and the poor, the committed and the uncommitted alike. Mankind must put an end to war or war will put an end to mankind.".

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About

Reflections on life, my past and anything under the sun as well as a journal of how it is to live in Aotearoa, "The Land of the Long White Cloud", which is New Zealand, from the viewpoint of a middle class Filipino family. Mga hinagpis, kakwelahan, ka-homesick-an ng isang Pinoy sa lupa ng mga ibong walang pakpak (kiwis) na mahaba ang tuka.

About Me

tipikal na pinoy workng in the IT industry. pero hindi mukhang nerd (that's what you think, sabi naman ng bruha kong anak). may maganda, mabait at napaka-sarap maglutong asawa at isang napakatalinong (mana sa ina), nagdadalagang anak. i've been in IT since the early 80's (tanda na no?). have worked in Saudi Arabia, then in Cal,USA, before finally settling in Auckland in '96.

Living in NZ

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